2013
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1301228110
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From perception to pleasure: Music and its neural substrates

Abstract: Music has existed in human societies since prehistory, perhaps because it allows expression and regulation of emotion and evokes pleasure. In this review, we present findings from cognitive neuroscience that bear on the question of how we get from perception of sound patterns to pleasurable responses. First, we identify some of the auditory cortical circuits that are responsible for encoding and storing tonal patterns and discuss evidence that cortical loops between auditory and frontal cortices are important … Show more

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Cited by 419 publications
(332 citation statements)
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References 126 publications
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“…In line with this idea, the unique ability of humans to appreciate aesthetic rewards such as music relies on higher order perceptual/ cognitive analysis and encompasses learning, experience, and cultural factors that would be expected to involve cortical systems (26)(27)(28). Our results also support the notion that to derive pleasure from music, the cortical and subcortical systems must act in concert; in particular, we found the interplay between the right STG and VS to be crucial.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 86%
“…In line with this idea, the unique ability of humans to appreciate aesthetic rewards such as music relies on higher order perceptual/ cognitive analysis and encompasses learning, experience, and cultural factors that would be expected to involve cortical systems (26)(27)(28). Our results also support the notion that to derive pleasure from music, the cortical and subcortical systems must act in concert; in particular, we found the interplay between the right STG and VS to be crucial.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 86%
“…On both computational and neuroanatomical grounds, these processes are likely to be vulnerable to the effects of neurodegenerative diseases, most notably AD and primary progressive aphasia syndromes that target peri-Sylvian cortex (progressive nonfluent aphasia (PNFA) and logopenic aphasia (LPA): [8][9][10][11]). A substantial body of structural and functional neuroimaging work in the healthy brain and in patients with focal brain lesions has delineated distributed cortico-subcortical networks that analyze the dimensions of music [6,12,13]: these networks closely overlap the networks targeted in canonical dementia syndromes [14,15]. However, to date most studies of music in dementia have focused on the interaction of music and memory [16][17][18], preserved abilities in trained musicians developing dementia [16,19,20] and potential benefits of music more widely in dementia [21][22][23][24][25].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The act of creative production (such as a musician playing at a concert, an artist painting in a studio, or a composer at work) and its relationship to the perception and contemplation of art works are involved (Tinio, 2013). The brain activity that corresponds to aesthetic experience is another way of defining the process, although the neuroscientific understanding of aesthetic experience is in its infancy (Brattico, Bogert, & Jacobsen, 2013;Brattico & Pearce, 2013;Calvo-Merino, Jola, Glaser, & Haggard, 2008;Cela-Conde, Agnati, Huston, Mora, & Nadal, 2011;Chatterjee, 2004;Chatterjee & Vartanian, 2014;Jacobs, Renken, & Cornelissen, 2012;Thakral, Moo, & Slotnick, 2012;Trost, Ethofer, Zentner, & Vuilleumier, 2012;Vartanian & Skov, 2014;Zatorre & Salimpoor, 2013). Other authors have argued that it can refer to pure pleasure, Empirical Musicology Review Vol.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%